All my info is compromised, fb, google, pnc, phone pixel 8 pro, disabled veteran asking for some help
I’m sorry you’re dealing with this. If multiple important accounts and your phone may be compromised, the priority is to secure access in a safe order and reduce further damage.
Do this first, in order
- Use a different, trusted device if possible. If you have access to another phone, tablet, or computer that you believe is clean, use that first for account recovery.
- Call your bank immediately using the number on the back of your card or the official PNC website: PNC Personal Banking
- Tell them you suspect account compromise and ask them to:
- Freeze or closely monitor accounts
- Review recent transactions
- Lock cards and issue replacements if needed
- Add extra verification if available
- Change your email password first, because email is usually the key to resetting other accounts.
- Then change passwords for financial accounts, Google, Facebook, and your mobile carrier account.
- Turn on two-factor authentication for each important account, preferably with an authenticator app or hardware key if available.
Priority order for accounts
- Primary email account
- Bank and payment accounts
- Mobile carrier account
- Google account
- Facebook and other social accounts
Google account recovery and security
If your Google account is still accessible:
- Go to https://myaccount.google.com/security
- Change your password
- Review recovery phone and recovery email
- Check signed-in devices and sign out of anything you do not recognize
- Review recent security activity
- Turn on 2-Step Verification
If you cannot access it, use Google’s official recovery page:
Sign in - Google Accounts
Facebook account steps
- Use Facebook’s compromised account page: Facebook
- Change the password
- Review logged-in sessions
- Remove unknown devices
- Turn on two-factor authentication
PNC and financial protection
- Review account activity for unauthorized transfers, card use, or new payees
- Ask the bank about temporary account restrictions if needed
- If personal information was exposed, consider a fraud alert or credit freeze with the major credit bureaus
Official credit bureau freeze pages:
About the Pixel 8 Pro
I cannot safely confirm that the phone itself is compromised without more evidence. Still, you can take low-risk steps first:
- Update Android fully from Settings
- Remove apps you do not recognize
- Check app permissions, especially Accessibility, Device Admin, Notification Access, and VPN access
- Run Google Play Protect
- Review installed VPN, remote access, cleaner, or “security” apps carefully
- Change your Google password from a trusted device before relying on the phone again
If the phone keeps behaving suspiciously after that:
- Back up only essential personal files like photos and contacts
- Do not back up unknown APKs or suspicious apps
- Factory reset the phone from official Settings
- After reset, install apps only from Google Play and sign back in carefully
Signs that need urgent attention
- Bank transactions you did not make
- Password reset emails you did not request
- Your phone number stops working or loses service unexpectedly, which can suggest SIM swap issues
- New devices or sessions in Google or Facebook that you do not recognize
If your phone number suddenly stops working, contact your mobile carrier immediately from another phone and ask them to check for unauthorized SIM changes.
Do not do this right now
- Do not install random “hack fix” or “phone cleaner” tools from ads or search results
- Do not call phone numbers from pop-ups, emails, or text messages
- Do not reuse old passwords
- Do not rely on SMS alone for account security if stronger 2FA is available
If you need forum-level help
If you want technical malware analysis, post details in the appropriate MalwareTips support section with:
- What happened first
- Whether you still have access to Google, Facebook, and your bank
- Any unauthorized transactions or password reset notices
- Whether your phone number still works normally
- Any suspicious apps recently installed
Bottom line
Secure email first, then bank and carrier, then Google and Facebook. Use official recovery pages only, and use a different trusted device if possible. If money or identity theft is involved, contact the bank and place credit protections today.